Category: Civilization, History, and Anthropology

  • “Curt, why was the beneficent WASP elite of the first 150 years of America repla

    –“Curt, why was the beneficent WASP elite of the first 150 years of America replaced by hostile ethnic Powers That Be? Fatigue? Malice?”–

    Great Question:
    1. The end of the emphasis on families demonstrating tradition and loyalty (cultural nobility), success at performance in military or industry, and the conversion of those ‘natural elites’ to those without demonstrated capacity or success in real world environments via credentialism in the academy – which is just, as is obvious at present, a secular clerisy. At least, outside of the subset of the STEM disciplines.
    2. While it does not seem to have been detrimental to expand the franchise to all white males in the early 19th century – it was so by the latter part of the century. This problem could ahve been avoided by opening the Franchise but only a new lower House, that had only veto and assent powers, not the capacity to introduce legislation. Worse, the introduction of women into the voting pool in 1920, without giving them a separate house of government, being the worst thing political decision we have made. Without that mistake there would be no left shift in politics after the war. Combined with direct election of the senators, by passing their appointment by the legislatures, thus further disempowering governors and states, and increasing the problem of mass democracy.
    So basically we took away all the loyalty and responsibility safeguards that were built into the traditional method of government.
    3. And as such these people set about undermining our common natural law and concurrent legislation trying constantly to impose policy that encourage and financed irresponsibility under the auspices of charity and care. The consequences have been, and are approaching the severity under which rome fell, and the dark ages followed.
    Cheers
    Curt


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-18 23:05:32 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1791968394129952768

  • When the lost generation was crushed by the world wars, we lost not only empires

    When the lost generation was crushed by the world wars, we lost not only empires, but the remnants of aristocratic values that accompanied them, producing ‘lost people’. These lost people re-entered a world that was hopelessly changed,
    It is very hard to blame any generation given that it’s responding to events that existed during it’s youth and teens.
    I think I have a grasp of’what went wrong’ and it’s largely that the wars opened teh doors for the marxist sequence, and the conversion of the colleges and universities postwar such that the elite institutions stopped training the ‘pseudo-noble’ american families with that traditional loyalty, led to credentialism on one hand and the capacity of marxists and progressives to bypass those traditions and instead use those educations and media to destroy our civilization from within. I Mean, carnegie was seeking to merge the soviets with the americans. That kind of idiocy was everywhere: the belief that you can replace aristocratic traditions that made the west rather than lift up the other lasses into that system and build upon it.

    Reply addressees: @sqpatrick77


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-18 22:40:39 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1791962130096271360

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1791941025667166281

  • WHAT MONUMENTS COULD MODERNS BUILD? cc: @robinhanson All, Hanson’s point is that

    WHAT MONUMENTS COULD MODERNS BUILD?
    cc: @robinhanson
    All,
    Hanson’s point is that to compare with ancient and medieval world investments, monuments must reflect a substantial investment in GDP. And, other than the space program, which cost something like one percent of just the budget, there are no longer monumental investments of that nature.

    Now, I’ve mentioned in an earlier post, the changes in incentives between then and now, but I haven’t mentioned that such investments are almost always architectural in some nature, since ‘all art begins with architecture’.

    So, are there any architectural investments capable of monumental expression that can consume, say, like cathedrals, twenty percent of GDP, and for sometimes, a century or more.

    Well, there are two possible conclusions from answering this question.
    1) We would need to build what is effectively a monumental city.
    2) We could build what is effectively a monumental COMMONS – everywhere.

    With a current GDP of 25 Trillion, devotion of say, we currently have a 4+ Trillion dollar budget. Now, to reach the same levels of investment, we’d need an additional five trillion per year on the construction of new monumental architecture employing vast numbers of people, on Monumental Cities and Tows, and, as did Napoleon, by converting the decrepitude of Paris into an urban heaven we still visit today with envy and joy – despite that democratic governments have done little to maintain and preserve it – produce our own pride, unity, and joy.

    There are achievements. We excel at them. They are our monuments today. But, perhaps, we should seek achievements in monumental construction instead of monumental consumption. 😉

    Affections
    CD

    Reply addressees: @auny_marie @Hail__To_You @robinhanson


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-17 19:01:43 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1791544644087558145

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1791523432347127955

  • WHY DON’T MODERNS BUILD MONUMENTS —“..ancient societies spent ~5-20% of their

    WHY DON’T MODERNS BUILD MONUMENTS
    —“..ancient societies spent ~5-20% of their GDP on monumental buildings. Why did they spend so much compared to us on such things?”—@robinhanson

    I’ve worked on this issue for a number of years. First, it’s surprising just how extraordinary are the very long term returns on production of monuments. Second, it’s rather easy to understand the incentives, in particular the difficulty in otherwise investing surplus production under agrarianism’s perishability of surpluses. Third They function as a massive redistribution program producing loyalty and legitimacy. Fourth, the institutional legitimacy produced: same as gods, they abstract and depersonalize loyalty in-time to over-time). Fifth, they are a status symbol that is very difficult to compete with, which in turn produces legitimacy in every dimension from human aesthetic and spiritual identification of ‘resources’ to pride and unification of the polity, to trade to tourism (pilgrimage), to war. ‘Wonder’ (the presence of resources) that makes humans feel small (submission to power) is effectively a calming effect (sedative) against anxiety.

    Now, (a) once we have democracy and politicians who must serve the voters (b) voters can extract the capital for their own consumption instead of concentrating it in long term indirect returns.

    Aristocracy produces art. Democracy does not.

    Cheers
    CD

    Reply addressees: @Hail__To_You @robinhanson


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-17 12:11:43 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1791441466255884288

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1791345290743877699

  • RT @LukeWeinhagen: @curtdoolittle Exploring the terms – “Whiteness” represents o

    RT @LukeWeinhagen: @curtdoolittle Exploring the terms –

    “Whiteness” represents one of many human domestication strategies (the interface…


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-16 06:05:04 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1790986807003246939

  • RT @whatifalthist: So, we all know the Great Replacement is real and happening r

    RT @whatifalthist: So, we all know the Great Replacement is real and happening right now right? I don’t know how you could conceivably not.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-15 14:36:01 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1790753006243180615

  • I”m English (anglo american) though genetically there is no difference between n

    I”m English (anglo american) though genetically there is no difference between northern France (normandy) and southern England, and little difference between them and Belgium, the Low Countries, and Denmark.

    While raised by a Breton French Catholic mother, and an english protestant father, given the family traditions, I am pretty much a Church of England protestant new England American descendent of puritans and the English middle and upper middle classes.

    I’m also an arrogant elitist snob, but at least I seek to help the little people and save them from the enemy. 😉

    Reply addressees: @finishedyet34


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-14 19:06:41 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1790458730598805504

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1790446723883749534

  • “The Number of People Keep Increasing” Yes, I agree with this understanding. We

    “The Number of People Keep Increasing”
    Yes, I agree with this understanding. We have moved from a social organization where first family loyalty, then cultural loyalty, then business loyalty, all of which take into account status and social skills, to an era where intellectual skills are finally let loose without the inhibitions of social conformity, status, and divided loyalty to other than the truth.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-14 18:46:59 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1790453774269526016

  • Correct. However, I wanted to expand on race differences, ethnic differences, re

    Correct.

    However, I wanted to expand on race differences, ethnic differences, religious differences, and ingroup preference, with the social, economic, and political costs of ‘criminality’ meaning diversity that imposes costs upon the capital-in-toto of the community. In other words, without full integration all diversity is something between criminal and warfare.

    *For the audience please note that my, job is solving the problem for all peoples, even if I have a vested interest in my own people. As such, you will generally find I do not presume all people are as you (we) are in preference for homogenity.

    Reply addressees: @radiofreenw


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-14 17:10:08 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1790429400929890305

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1790425500239736949

  • The TERM racism silly. And BTW. Indians top the chart as the most racist people

    The TERM racism silly. And BTW. Indians top the chart as the most racist people in the world. And whites the least. Not surprisingly.


    Source date (UTC): 2024-05-14 04:20:41 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1790235760886448192

    Reply addressees: @pdxrob25

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1790235246711255393